Whether you’re listening to the driving beat of a Daft Punk song or the opening chords of a mellow Jack Johnson track, both have an effect on your brain that is not seen in any other animal.
When you listen to music, a part of your brain called the nucleus accumbens activates. This triggers the release of the ‘pleasure chemical’ dopamine, that lives in a group of neurons in your brain called the Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA).
This pathway in the brain is called the Reward System and Dopamine is strongly associated with it.
Dopamine is the same chemical that gets released when you eat your favorite food or when you get a new follower on Twitter, causing you to want more, more, more.
It’s campaign season…
Do you fear your doctor and hospital? Apparently lots of Americans do now – according to Texas Right to Life PAC.
Published via Pressgram
The secret to my success
Someone’s trying to pull up
I am Jonathan Blundell…
I took a quiz and found out I’m Jonathan Blundell.
I’m a husband, father, blogger, podcaster and author of St. Peter’s Brewery. I’m just hoping to live a simple life and follow Jesus.
Published via Pressgram
10 things great speakers never say
​Inc. has a great list of tips on things you should never say when speaking in front of an audience (of any size).
- "I'm jet-lagged/tired/hungover."
- "Can you hear me? Yes you can!"
- "I can't see you because the lights are too bright."
- "I'll get back to that later."
- "Can you read this?"
- "Let me read this out loud for you."
- "Shut off your phone/laptop/tablet."
- "You don't need to write anything down or take photos; the presentation will be online later."
- "Let me answer that question."
- "I'll keep it short."
- Bonus tip: "What, I'm out of time? But I have 23 more slides!"
I've personally used a variation of #1 – the daddy excuse. But that was more for my appearance than poor presentation skills.
Also, I know a lot of people get worried about answering questions in the middle of a presentation – I actually prefer it. I like to plan my talk to fill the entire alloted time but know my topic well enough that I can swerve off the planned presentation if needed.
A few years ago I presented at Conference Day during each break-out session and I don't believe I ever moved beyond the third or forth slide thanks to great questions from the audience. And even using a limited version of my planned presentation, we had a great discussion each time - covering completely different aspects of social media.
Finally, I would also add, don't make jokes about the weather. The last conference I attended was during the December snow storm in Dallas. It felt like EVERY speaker had to start off with some joke about how Dallas is supposed to be hot and not snowy.
After the third speaker the jokes get really boring and old.
What would you add to the list?



